Over the course of the past 18 months Glasgow-based outfit Cwfn (pronounced coven) — Agnes Alder (vocals, rhythm guitar), Guy DeNuit (backing vocals, lead guitar), Rös Ranquinn (drums) and Mary Thomas Baker (bass) — have quickly built up a reputation as one of the region’s hottest, emerging doom bands. Their debut single, last October’s “Reliks” won over fans and critics, with the song landing on Kerrang‘s release of the week playlist.
Building upon a rapidly growing profile, the Scottish quartet’s highly-anticipated full-length debut, the Kevin Hare and band co-produced Sorrows is slated for a May 30, 2025 release. Recorded at Deep Storm Productions, Sorrows reportedly lives in the space around doom, where the weight of the materials riffs are matched by the weight in your chest — and with material where the lyrics and songwriting as equally as important as the music. The band intend to write material that’s big on riffs but even bigger on feeling; to create songs that you carry with you throughout your life. The album sees Cwfn’s Alder bearing her (proverbial) claws one minute, whispering and pleading the next while she and her bandmates craft a sound that’s like a brewing storm front.
“We never set out to write an album. We were just four friends making music we wanted to hear. But then Sorrows emerged, and when it did, it pulled us into its orbit. We couldn’t ignore it,” Cwfn’s Agnes Alder says. “When we stopped trying to fit into any one space, what came out was this beautiful mix of dark and light. Something visceral and cathartic.”
The album will also feature long-anticipated reworkings of “Embers” and “Bodies,” their two self-recorded demos that are also fan favorites — and helped catapult them into the national and international scenes.
Sorrows latest single “Bodies” is a brewing and uneasy storm of a track, that features Alder’s guttural, almost crypt keeper-like delivery floating around swirling, churning and sludgy power chord-driven riffage, thunderous drumming and the band’s knack for enormous hooks. And at its core, the song expresses a deep-seated, seething rage that has built up to an all-consuming conflagration.
“Bodies was one of the first songs I’d written for Cwfen. I’d gone through a period of significant change in my life and had burned out to the point of caring a lot less about things that had previously been important to me when I was younger,” the band’s Alder explains. “As I was writing, I’d imagined this sort of vast, feminine cosmic horror. Sort of the opposite of what women are supposed to be. And I had this thought: what if, instead of being told to stay small and keep producing, a woman took up the biggest space possible and just… consumed? Almost a black-hole-sized matriarch hoovering up everything until there was nothing left. It was fun to think about this sort of monstrous feminine presence that can’t be stopped. So the song was sort of an exploration of those feelings, a catharsis of sorts. And permission to be terrifying.”
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